Full Description
Anne Brontë's second and last novel was widely and contentiously reviewed upon its 1848 publication, in part because its subject matter domestic violence, alcoholism, women's rights, and universal salvation was so controversial. The tale unfolds through a series of letters between two friends as one man learns more about Helen Huntingdon and the past that brought this young painter and single mother to Wildfell Hall. Powerfully plotted and unconventionally structured, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is now considered to be a classic of Victorian literature.
This Broadview Edition includes a critical introduction that situates the novel in significant Victorian debates, and provides appendices that make clear Brontë's intellectual inheritance from important eighteenth-century writers such as Hannah More and Mary Wollstonecraft. Material on temperance, education, childrearing, and nineteenth-century women artists is also included in the appendices.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Anne Brontë: A Brief Chronology
A Note on the Text
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Appendix A: Other Writings by Anne and Charlotte Brontë
Anne Brontë, Letter to the Reverend David Thom (30 December 1848)
Anne Brontë, "To Cowper" (1846)
Anne Brontë, "A Word to the 'Elect'" (1846)
From Charlotte Brontë, "Biographical Notice of Ellis and Acton Bell" (1850)
Charlotte Brontë, Introduction to "Poems by Acton Bell" (1850)
Appendix B: Contemporary Reviews
Athenaeum (8 July 1848)
The Examiner (29 July 1848)
Fraser's Magazine (April 1849)
The Literary World (12 August 1848)
North American Review (October 1848)
Rambler (September 1848)
Sharpe's London Magazine (August 1848)
The Spectator (8 July 1848)
Appendix C: Women's Education
From Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792)
From Hannah More, Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education (1799)
From Sarah Lewis, Woman's Mission (1840)
John Cowie, "Noble Sentiments on the Influence of Women," Howitt's Journal (March 1847)
Appendix D: Wives
From Hannah More, Coelebs in Search of a Wife (1808)
From Caroline Norton, A Letter to the Queen on Lord Chancellor Cranworth's Marriage and Divorce Bill (1855)
Appendix E: Childrearing
From Hannah More, Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education (1799)
From John S.C. Abbott, The Mother at Home (1833)
From John S.C. Abbott, The Child at Home (1834)
From Sarah Lewis, Woman's Mission (1840)
From Berthold Auerbach, "Every-day Wisdom, Plucked from the Garden of Childhood," Howitt's Journal (January 1848)
From Anonymous, "The Moral Discipline of Children," British Quarterly Review (April 1858)
Appendix F: Temperance
From Joseph Entwisle, "On Drinking Spirits," The Methodist Magazine (July 1804)
J.P. Parker, Lecture on Temperance and Slavery, Howitt's Journal (24 April 1847)
From Anonymous, "Temperance and Teetotal Societies," Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (April 1853)
Thomas Buchanan Read, "What a Word May Do" (1868)
Appendix G: Women and Art
Anonymous, "Let Us Join the Ladies," Punch (July 1857)
From Ellen C. Clayton, English Female Artists (1876)
Select Bibliography